Oklahoma Code § 43A-5-415

Title 43A. Mental Health: Hearing – Order - Records
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A.  Upon receiving a petition alleging a person to be a person
requiring treatment, the court shall set a day and time for the
hearing.
1.  If the person alleged to be a person requiring treatment
does not have an attorney, the court shall immediately appoint an
attorney for the person.
2.  If a copy of a mental health evaluation is not attached to
the petition at the time it is filed, the court shall immediately
order a mental health evaluation of the person as provided by
Section 5-414 of this title.
B.  If the court deems it necessary, or if the person alleged to
be a person requiring treatment demands, the court shall schedule
the hearing on the petition as a jury trial to be held within one
hundred twenty (120) hours or five (5) days of the demand, excluding
weekends and holidays, or within as much additional time as is
requested by the attorney of such person upon good cause shown.
C.  The court, at the hearing on the petition, shall determine
by clear and convincing evidence whether the person is a person
requiring treatment.
1.  The court shall take evidence and make findings of fact
concerning the person's competency to consent to or refuse the
treatment that may be ordered, including, but not limited to, the
consumer's right to refuse medication.
2.  If a jury trial is not demanded, the court may receive as
evidence and act upon the affidavits of the licensed mental health
professionals who evaluated the person and the mental health
evaluation.
3.  When the hearing is conducted as a jury trial, the
petitioner and any witness in behalf of the petitioner shall be
subject to cross-examination by the attorney for the person alleged
to be a person requiring treatment.  The person alleged to be a
person requiring treatment may also be called as a witness and
cross-examined.
D.  After the hearing, when the court determines that the person
is not a person requiring treatment, the court shall dismiss the
petition and, if the person is being detained, order the person to
be discharged from detention.
E.  After the hearing, when the court determines the person to
be a person requiring treatment, the court shall order the person to
receive the least restrictive treatment consistent with the
treatment needs of the person and the safety of the person and
others.

1.  The court shall not order hospitalization without a thorough
consideration of available treatment alternatives to hospitalization
and may direct the submission of evidence as to the least
restrictive treatment alternative or may order a mental health
examination.
2.  If the court finds that a program other than hospitalization
is appropriate to meet the treatment needs of the individual and is
sufficient to prevent injury to the individual or to others, the
court may order the individual to receive whatever treatment other
than hospitalization that is appropriate for a period set by the
court, during which time the court shall continue its jurisdiction
over the individual as a person requiring treatment.
3.  If the court orders the person to be committed for
involuntary inpatient treatment, the court shall commit the person
to the custody of the Department of Mental Health and Substance
Abuse Services for a placement that is suitable to the person's
needs or to a private facility willing to accept the person for
treatment.
4.  The person shall be delivered to the custody of the
Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services for a
placement that is suitable to the person's needs or to a private
facility willing to accept the person for treatment.
5.  If the person is placed in the custody of the Department,
the Department may designate two or more facilities to provide
treatment and if the person to be treated or a parent, spouse,
guardian, brother, sister or child, who is at least eighteen (18)
years of age, of the person, expresses a preference for one such
facility, the Department shall attempt, if administratively
possible, to comply with the preference.
6.  The person shall be discharged from inpatient treatment at
such time as the person no longer requires treatment as determined
by the executive director of the facility or the designee of the
executive director, or as otherwise required by law.
F.  The court shall make and keep records of all cases brought
before it.
1.  Except as provided in Section 1290.27 of Title 21 of the
Oklahoma Statutes, no records of proceedings pursuant to this
section shall be open to public inspection except by order of the
court or to employees of the Department of Mental Health and
Substance Abuse Services if the person is placed at a state facility
or the employees of the private facility where admitted if accepted
into a private facility, the person's attorney of record, the
person's treatment advocate as defined pursuant to Section 1-109.1
of this title, if any, a person having a valid power of attorney
with health care decision-making authority, a person having valid
guardianship with health care decision-making authority, a person
having an advance health care directive, a person having an

attorney-in-fact as designated in a valid mental health advance
directive or persons having a legitimate treatment interest, unless
specifically indicated otherwise by the instrument or court order.
The documents shall not identify the alleged person requiring
treatment directly or indirectly as a person with a substance abuse
disorder.
2.  Bonded abstractors may be deemed to be persons having a
legitimate interest for the purpose of having access to records
regarding determinations of persons requiring treatment under this
section.
Added by Laws 1997, c. 387, § 9, eff. Nov. 1, 1997.  Amended by Laws
2002, c. 488, § 42, eff. Nov. 1, 2002; Laws 2005, c. 150, § 48,
emerg. eff. May 9, 2005; Laws 2006, c. 97, § 22, eff. Nov. 1, 2006;
Laws 2010, c. 287, § 30, eff. Nov. 1, 2010; Laws 2013, c. 3, § 2,
eff. Nov. 1, 2013; Laws 2013, c. 217, § 5, eff. Nov. 1, 2013; Laws
2014, c. 259, § 4, eff. July 1, 2015; Laws 2022, c. 297, § 7, eff.
Nov. 1, 2022.

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